Hey a new creature video, this time focusing on schools and formations of creatures. All the creatures, behaviours, animations and the environment are programmed in C#. The soundtrack is made by the amazing and beautiful Etherwood, who I saw perform last week.
I just published a couple of games I wrote a few years ago in Processing on Itch.
YASC is a fast-paced deathmatch style game for up to 4 players inspired by Spacewar. Each player spawns in a different corner of the screen. Bullets and the players wrap around the screen creating interesting gameplay strategies. Players must acquire ammo, lives and shields to survive. The sun in the center of the screen pulls everything towards it.
NILL is a procedurally generated game about collecting pods from landing pads inspired by Lunar Lander. Use an XBOX 360 controller or the arrow keys to control your spaceship. Make sure to keep your speed low and your angle straight as you land. Also fuel is limited so make sure and collect the green fuel tanks that fall from the sky, while avoiding the falling asteroids.
My first and second year programming students are learning to code by making generative art using Processing. These images are all made using code, algorithms and maths. Here are some of the sketches they made last week!
This video is the improved whale behaviour, now with movable fins:
This video shows all the new creatures in a test environment, with a couple of earlier versions of the whale:
There are 2 whales, one with 6 fins and one with 2 fins. There are the wandering dolphins which also flee from the player.
There are the sardines which I am now very proud of. This demo has 500 in VR at 100 FPS. The exhibit beautiful emergent flocking behaviours both in the open water and while in caves. They also flee from the player and the whales. When they do this, a hole opens in the school and the whale passes through. Finally there is the family of ray fish which fly over the scene maintaining a V formation.
12 Minutes of pure boids. Straight off the laptop. No editing. Enjoy.
The boids in this video and the environment in which they swim are procedurally generated…
My boids are now multi-threaded so there are moe of them. They are limited now only in the poor performance of the pesky Unity trail renderer!
They spontaneously organise themselves into beautiful, emergent patterns that resemble fireworks. Sometimes they seem to form a wall climbing collective, yearning upwards and then emerging over the mountaintop to fly!
I have been working on some robotics projects recently and here is one of them! Project Janus is a gesture tracked robot arm. The arm is assembled from a cheap kit I bought on eBay and it’s connected to an Ardunio micro-controller. The Arduino is running a sketch that allows me to set the angles of each of the servos by sending commands over the USB connection. A sketch written in Processing is running on the connected laptop. The sketch has sliders that allow me to set the the angles on each of the servos. Additionally I use a leap motion to allow me to control the robot arm using intuitive hand gestures. I’m hoping to try out the latest leap motion SDK and also the make the arm controllable over the internet.
This is a an early prototype VR experiment called forms I am working on with Darren Fitzpatrick. The journey is generated randomly through a procedurally generated 3D landcsape that extends infinitely in all directions. Conways Game of Life plays out on the landscape below you as you experience the thrill of swimming with a school of dolphins! Maybe you are a dolphin? Many of the creatures are procedurally animated. Some are entirely procedurally drawn and animated like the Minnowforms. The colours are glitchy and random, creatures glitch in and out, but it’s a beautiful crazy trip in VR!
Come and observe the procedural minnow forms swimming, dancing and playing! These creatures are procedurally animated drawn and coloured. They are controlled by a set of simple behaviors that when combined together magically causes the Minnowforms to exhibit complex and beautiful flocking behaviours. Maybe they are alive? Also Conway’s Game of Life plays out on the procedurally generated infinite terrain below… Creatures programmed in C# using Unity 3D. All code in my git http://github.com/skooter500/Fish. I don’t own the beautiful music. It’s You Mean So Much To Me by Blonds.
This is a screenshot of my little fishies swimming in their new home. The landscape is generated using Perlin noise and playing out on the landscape is Conway’s Game of Life. Next plan is to a tile based infinite terrain and also to deform the terrain using various mathematical functions to create mountains and caves
Yo. Check out this beautiful playthrough of a pre-Amaze festival build of DEEP. I programmed the lovely fish behaviours in this demo with procedural flocking, scene avoidance and procedural animations.